I\'m guessing that #lang racket is a dialect of scheme with much more out of the box structures and common functions and perhaps would be more pedagogic. What are the perks
Yes, #lang racket
is the racket default dialect, with lots of extensions.
Two places where it is not an extension: if
must have an else branch, and pairs are immutable (no set-car!
and set-cdr!
).
#lang scheme
was used for a while before the name change, and now #lang racket
is used consistently. But we kept #lang scheme
around for compatibility (as well as various scheme/---
libraries that are kept and can sometime be different than racket/---
counterparts). There's no reason to use #lang scheme
in new code.
To follow SICP, don't use any of these -- there's a SICP language available (usable with #lang sicp
), originally written by Neil Van Dyke, but now maintained within the Racket community.
To follow HtDP, don't use any of these, use the student languages. There are also new #lang
-based variants like #lang htdp/bsl
but they're not in a complete shape, yet. (And HtDP is not #lang racket
specific.)
No, Racket is very different from Chicken Scheme. You might be able to run some code in both, but those would probably be only tiny toy examples.